Israeli scientist: The September raid on Syria hit a nuclear bomb factory

Not a nuclear reactor. A nuclear bomb factory, with North Korea providing the plutonium.

Professor Uzi Even of Tel Aviv University was one of the founders of the Israeli nuclear reactor at Dimona, the source of the Jewish state’s undeclared nuclear arsenal.

“I suspect that it was a plant for processing plutonium, namely, a factory for assembling the bomb,” he said. “I think the DPRK [Democratic People’s Republic of Korea] transferred to Syria weapons-grade plutonium in raw form, that is nuggets of easily transported metal in protective cans. I think the shaping and casting of the plutonium was supposed to be in Syria.”

From beneath the veil of military censorship, western commentators have formed a consensus that the target was a nuclear reactor under construction.

But Even said that purely from scientific observation, he had reached a different conclusion – that it was a nuclear bomb factory, posing a more immediate danger to Israel. He said that satellite photos of the site, taken before the Israeli strike on September 6, showed no sign of the cooling towers and chimneys characteristic of nuclear reactors.

Syria’s haste after the attack to bury the site under tons of soil suggested that hundreds of square yards were contaminated and there were fears of radiation, the professor added.

Since then the Syrians have sealed up the location, levelled the site and diverted curious journalists to a place that had not been attacked by Israel.

The professor’s theory fits with authoritative technical evidence about North Korea’s nuclear weapons programme. The North Koreans are able to produce weapons-grade plutonium, which is electro-refined, alloyed and cast into shapes ready to be machined to fit into a warhead, according to a team of distinguished American nuclear weapons scientists who visited the country’s laboratories.

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I’ll stress that this is one scientist’s theory, but given who the scientist is and the secrecy that has followed the raid and the story that followed about how close the raid came to sparking a wider war, it makes as much sense as anything else. It does sort of fit with an earlier report that Israel’s target was Syrian missiles. The target could have been Syrian missiles that were being fit with nuclear payloads. It would be difficult to imagine a more urgent scenario, one that forced the Israelis to act, than that.

(via Jihad Watch)

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John Stossel 12:00 AM | May 10, 2024
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